ironstone pizzazz yarn

Transcription

ironstone pizzazz yarn
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Arizona’s
March-April 14
Contact Information & Index March-April Index
Barbara Stillman, Publisher & Office Manager
Lolly Konecky, Publisher & Art Director
Patty Duncan - Sales/Office Assistant
Kayce Westfall - Sales/Office Assistant
Nancy Williams, Editorial Consultant
515 E. Carefree Hwy #1128 • Phoenix, AZ 85085
[email protected]
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888-942-8950
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enjoyed by a kindred readership. To receive a sample
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rates are available upon request. The Antique RegisterTM
is available at each shop that advertises and often at
other unique locations. We hope you enjoy this bimonthly publication and let the advertisers know. This
is a publication of Bar Lo Media, L.L.C.
The Antique Register was founded by Barbara Floyd
THE ANTIQUE REGISTER™, Months of March-April 2014
Volume 17 Number 2. Deadline for next issue is April 1st.
THE ANTIQUE REGISTER™ is published every other month. Copyright
2014. Reproduction or use, without permission, of editorial or graphic content
in any manner is prohibited by law. 515 E Carefree Hwy #1128, Phoenix, AZ
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Phoenix, AZ 85085
Tucson ..............................................................................3-7, 29
Sonoita • Green Valley • Hereford ............................................ 8
Bisbee • Casa Grande • Clifton ................................................. 9
Rinker on Collectibles............................................................. 10
Oracle ...................................................................................... 11
Globe-Miami ...................................................................... 11-12
Fountain Hills.......................................................................... 13
Carefree ................................................................................... 14
Cave Creek .........................................................................14-15
Scottsdale .....................................................................16-17, 21
Phoenix ..................................................................18-23, 26, 56
Mesa .............................................................................21, 27-31
Special Events ....................................................................24-25
Tempe ...................................................................................... 26
Chandler ............................................................................ 29, 35
Apache Junction .................................................................32-33
Gilbert ..................................................................................... 34
Historic Downtown Glendale & Catlin Court ...................36-38
Sun City • Peoria • Sun City West .......................................... 38
Special Services ...................................................................... 39
Cottonwood ............................................................................. 40
McGuireville • Camp Verde .................................................... 41
Dealing with the Dealers ......................................................... 42
Dewey-Humboldt • Mayer ...................................................... 43
Prescott...............................................................................44-45
Pine & Payson ....................................................................46-47
Yarnell ..................................................................................... 48
Wickenburg ............................................................................. 49
Kingman • Fort Mohave ......................................................... 50
Sedona • Williams ................................................................... 51
Las Vegas, NV • Boulder City, NV ....................................52-53
Yuma ....................................................................................... 54
Silverton, Co & So. California................................................ 55
Goodyear ................................................................................. 56
Arizona’s
Your Guide to the Antique and Collectible Marketplace • Established 1998
Affordable & Effective Advertising for
Shops, Dealers, Events & Special Services
Edition
Month 2014
Editorial and
Ad Deadline
January - February
December 1
March - April
February 1
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June 1
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515 E Carefree Hwy, #1128 • Phoenix, AZ 85085
Email: [email protected]
March-April 14
Tucson Cover Story
Gather A Vintage Market in Tucson
by Nancy Willaims
Gather A Vintage Market in Tucson specializes in antique
and vintage furniture and finds for your home and garden so
we thought this outdoor scene featuring some of their items
made a perfect cover.
Photographer Hilary Lamb
took the picture.
This unique Market is
open once each month for
four days from Thursday
through Sunday. The
upcoming Market schedule
is: March 20 to 23; April
17 to 19 (closed on Easter
Sunday); and May 15
to 18. Regular hours are
Thursday to Saturday, 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sunday,
10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Owned by Tray and
Simone Gers and Grant
and Melinda Gers, Gather
evolved following Tray’s having booths in antique malls. A
life-long collector, Tray’s collection had needed paring down
when he decided to sell some things and ended up in two Tucson
malls. Although he was happy with both experiences, he wanted
to do more. Having visited similar venues around the country,
he felt Tucson was ready for its own four-day vintage market so
Continued on page 5...
3
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Tucson March-April 14
March-April 14
Tucson Gather, continued from page 3...
he rallied other vendors and launched the business in January
2013. Grant and Melinda were moving back to Tucson and were
excited to collaborate in the new venture.
The Market is located at 657 W. St Mary’s Road in the old
Arizona Sash & Door Warehouse with an old railroad spur that
runs alongside it. The Gers loved the old galvanized tin, the
exposed wood beams and rafters and the wood floor and felt it
was the perfect setting for a vintage market.
At Gather all of the vendors work together to create a new
shopping experience each month. Revolving around themes,
merchandise is blended and each vignette includes items from
multiple vendors as they work collaboratively. Every month,
the store is completely redone—the floor plan is changed, new
merchandise brought in and a completely new look is created.
The goal is to have customers walk into a magical experience.
This is truly a family business and Tray, Simone, Grant and
Melinda divide up the tasks, taking care of their own parts. Then
they all come together around the fun—buying and selling—
including enjoying family road trips across America hunting
for treasures. They love market days, visiting with regular
customers and hearing what they did with the treasures they
bought in prior months.
In addition to the Gers family, Gather has 8 vendors—Dee,
Elizabeth, Elaine, Linda, Betty, Bridget, Rhea and Denise.
Dee and Elaine were the original owners of The Grey House
Antiques in Tucson and Denise worked there. Elizabeth owned
her own store in North Carolina before moving to Tucson. Linda
works for a Green Valley Interior Design firm. Betty, Rhea and
Bridget have, for years, loved collecting and selling antiques
Continued on page 11...
5
Tucson Christine’s Antiques
and
Elegant Junque
Shop
There are 4 antique shops & 3 thrift
shops in walking distance.
Christine’s is the
oldest antique shop in Tucson
Open 53 years!!
WE HAVE IT ALL!
4932 - 4940 E. Speedway • Tucson, AZ
Mon-Sat 10:00-5:30 Sun by chance
520-323-0018 • 520-881-8181
We Are Not a Mall • Deal with the Owners
Tucson’s Oldest Antique Mall
Turquoise Jewelry
In the Heart of Tucson’s
Antiquing District
Fine Art, Furniture, Rare Books,
Postcards, Old Photographs,
Fine Jewelry, Art Pottery,
Vintage Turquoise Jewelry,
Minerals
www.americanantiquemall.com
www.americanheirloomappraisers.com
3130 E. Grant @
Country Club
Tucson, AZ
520-326-3070
GRANT RD
ALVERNON WAY
2 Huge Shops Side by Side
American
Antique Mall
COUNTRY CLUB
200,000 + Items
March-April 14
CAMPBELL AVE
6
Tucson
March-April 14
7
Tucson’s
Guide
To Great Antiquing & Collecting
1. Elegant Junque Shop
4932 E. Speedway • 520-881-8181
2. Christine’s Antiques
4940 E. Speedway • 520-323-0018
3. Copper Country Mall*
5051 E. Speedway • 520-326-0167
4. Tom’s Fine Furniture & Collectibles
5454 E. Pima Street • 520-795-5210
5. 22nd Street Antique Mall*
5302 E. 22nd Street • 520-514-5262
6. Darlene Morris Antiques, LLC
2940 N Swan, Ste 128 • 520-322-9050
7. American Antique Mall
3130 E. Grant • 520-326-3070
8. Grey House
3067 N. Campbell Ave. • 520-325-0400
9. Adobe House Antiques
2700 N. Campbell Ave • 520-325-9439
10. LionsGate Antiques
2000 E Speedway • 520-319-2004
11. Arte De La Vida*
37 N Tucson Blvd. • 520-398-6720
12. Stone Ave. Antiques & Gifts
267 S. Stone Ave • 520-370-1797
13. Gather - A Vintage Market
657 W St. Mary’s
14. eclectic interiors
657 W St. Mary’s • Hours by Appointment
N
15. Cat Mountain Emporium*
6
8
Glenn
Broadway Blvd.
3
Craycroft
12
Speedway Blvd.
Swan
12
UNIQUE AND FABULOUS FINDS
ALL UNDER ONE ROOF
4
Pima
5th St.
11
Grant Road
Alvernon
N. Tucson
10
Country Club
13
14
N Campbell
7
Dodge
9
N 6th Ave
N Granada - N Main Ave
2740 S Kinney Rd • 520-578-8795
5
22nd St.
200 SPECIALTY DEALERS
• Antique Furniture • Collectibles
• Military Memorabilia • Rare Books - Framed Art
•Collections from Mexico
We buy Gold & Silver
10
S
e
nn
Ki
15
,
e In
om d!
C
ze
p,
Sto Ama
Be
d
yR
* Open Sundays
Maps Not To Scale
86
10
19
www.coppercountryantiques.com
Mall Hours: Monday-Saturday 10am to 6pm • Sunday 11am-5pm
Sonoita • Green Valley • Hereford 8
March-April 14
Defining ‘Old Pawn’ When Buying
Native American Turquoise Jewelry
off
20% ly
k
wee als
i
c
e
sp
20th Anniv
Bygones
ersar
y
Antiques, Jewelry, Collectibles, Furniture
In the Green Valley Plaza • 175 S. La Canada, #121
Green Valley, Arizona 85614 • (520) 648-5222
Go to our NEW website
www.theantiqueregister.com
to find all our advertising
shops on our interactive map!
by Glena Dunn
The Term “Old Pawn” comes from the early practice of Native
American Indians of the Southwest of leaving their handmade
jewelry at trading posts to obtain supplies. Years ago, it was
common to store at least some of the family’s wealth as collateral
at the trading posts, enabling them to make payments. They could
retain ownership and had the ability to get their significant jewelry
pieces out for ceremonies in the spring and fall.
The use (or abuse) of the term today is broad in application
(some using it for anything that doesn’t look new) and scope.
I see it used incorrectly everywhere from eBay to auctions and
bricks & mortar shops. Therefore, it is prudent not to make any
assumptions based on this label unless you know how ‘Old Pawn’
is defined by the person who labeled it thus.
It some areas, it still is a practice of the Southwestern Native
American Indians to pawn turquoise jewelry, handmade blankets,
baskets and artwork, to convert their possessions into liquidity
for life’s necessities with the intention of getting them back. If
the items are not redeemed, it makes them ‘Dead Pawn,’ not ‘Old
Pawn,’ which indicates age. ‘Old Pawn’ is generally agreed to
be at least ‘vintage’ (defined as 50 years or older) jewelry made
by Native Americans that may or may not have been pawned at
some time.
Because of its age, Old Pawn portrays craftsmanship from the
past, may include turquoise from closed mines or other unusual
stones and usually shows wear from usage. It may or may not
be signed or marked as sterling. Some of the earlier pieces are
coin silver. Another one of the major characteristics of Old Pawn
jewelry is that the pieces are (in general), comparatively heavy
in weight. American Indian artisans, especially the Navajo, used
a lot of silver, especially in pieces that were not made with the
intention of selling. Because of the rise in silver as a commodity,
newer pieces are usually lighter in order to maintain affordability.
This is especially true of ‘production’ pieces. About 90% of
what I see in stores today selling “Authentic Native American
Jewelry’ is new and mass produced. Most of it is pre-fabricated,
even cast, rather than the metal worked by a silversmith. The
stones are cut and polished to fit the prefabricated settings. (Old
Pawn was designed to the shape of the stones.)
To date, I have not been able to find anywhere in the US where
this work can originate on a scale that is commensurate with the
vast quantities being produced for all the stores carrying it. And,
further, where there are Native Americans involved in the process
at least at some point.
Sadly, there is far less of this historic Native American
silverwork now than there was just ten years ago. When the price
of silver shot up to $50 a troy ounce a few years ago, much of
it was scrapped. Also, thieves never want to be caught with or
selling anything that is identifiable, such as these unique pieces.
And there is a lot more thieving going on these days.
In summary, although ‘Old Pawn’ is technically ‘Dead Pawn’
from at least 50 years ago, the usage of the term is much broader
today. Research online and comparative shopping is recommended
before you invest in this rare and valuable category.
This article is not intended to negate the value of newer
truly authentic Native American artist silver work. With new
technology and inspiration, there are amazingly beautiful designs
and well-constructed pieces currently being crafted and available.
My intent is to point out that, when defined correctly by age and
validated by the old techniques of workmanship and materials
Continued on next page...
March-April 14
Bisbee • Casa Grande • Clifton Book Review
“Under Glass, A Victorian
Obsession” Shows Beautiful
Decorative Arts
by Robert Reed
Victorian volumes were beautiful before and now they are
beautiful again in the majestic new volume, Under Glass-A
Victorian Obsession by John
Whitenight. The book provides
more than 600 images of treasured
decorative arts from delicate flowers
to Gothic Revival style shell-work
shrines.
“Contrasted with the formality
and the rather stiff morality of the
19th century, there was a spirit of
lightheartedness and whimsy to be
found in the decorative arts between
1837 and 1901,” notes the author in
the book’s introduction.
In that broad spectrum is the
unique Victorian parlor and, more
specifically, the glass dome—or what was more commonly called
in those days ‘the shade.’ Under that dome or shade could be
found a rich offering of silk, velvet, marble, carved wood, muslin
or related works.
“So, four decades and hundreds of domes later, the hunt and
quest for knowledge about these phenomenal art forms captured
under glass continues,” adds Whitenight.
Chapters include wax art forms, shell work, hair works,
stylish feather creations, skeletons of leaves, wood works, glass
whimsies, automata-mechanical treasures, musical masterworks
and similar topics.
The text of historical fact and Victorian social commentary
provides a solid background for the hundreds of illustrated
examples. Whitenight himself has been collecting and researching
Victorian glass domes since the 1970s.
Under Glass: A Victorian Obsession by John Whitenight,
hardcover, 628 color illustrations, 23 black and white photographs,
288 pages, and index is $89.99 plus shipping from Schiffer
Publishing, www.schifferbooks.com.
Book reviews by Robert Reed, Antique and Collectible News
Service, PO Box 204, Knightstown, IN 46148.
incorporated, genuine Old Pawn Native American Indian jewelry
is recognized as a limited category with unique qualities and is,
therefore, highly valued and sought after.
I do not claim to be an expert, but because I deal in this
category, I have found it necessary to try to determine proper
use of this term. In researching for a definition, I came up with
something I can post in my store as to what I mean by it. It gives
my customers the assurance that they have an understanding (in
writing) of what I saying when I use ‘Old Pawn’ in describing
what they are considering purchasing.
Many have asked for copies of this article. It is not meant to
define ‘Old Pawn’ for the world, but it does define how I use it in
my shop. A definition makes the term far more useful because of
the other, broader interpretations.
Glena Dunn owns Back in Thyme, a vintage collection in the
heart of Old Town in Boulder City, Nevada. She is the publisher of
The Country Register of Southern Nevada. Glena can be reached
via email at: [email protected].
“A Unique Experience In Shopping, With
Quality Merchandise At Reasonable Prices”
Gifts • Primitives & Furniture • Estate Liquidation
Located Across From The Historic City Hall
507 E. Florence Blvd • Casa Grande
Call For Store Hours
Donna Kerr • Owner
Dealers Welcome
520-836-3659
9
10
Rinker On Collectibles
Rinker On Collectibles March-April 14
Developing an Interior Decorating Mindset, Part I
When conducting an appraisal clinic, I inform participants
that I will use one of three basic values to determine the worth
of an object. The first is collector value—what a collector
that does not own but wants to buy an example will pay. I
emphasize that while collector value was once the dominant
secondary market antiques and collectibles value, collector
value lost its king of the hill status at the dawn of the 21st
century.
Reuse value is the second. Most antiques and collectibles
began life as functional objects—a chair to sit in, a plate from
which to eat, or a toy for the purpose of play. This functional
application is not lost over time. It remains inherent within
the object.
Decorative value, the most complex of the three values and
the new king of the hill, is the third. A value in itself, decorator
value has subcategories that include conversation, neat,
nostalgia and wow or pizzazz value. In addition, value results
from an object’s ability to support or enhance a designer or
fashion Look, especially if the Look is “hot” at the time.
Antiques and collectibles appraisers, auctioneers, collectors,
dealers and others in the trade are adept at understanding
collecting value, their primary focus. Sophisticated members
understand that antiques and collectibles have multi-faceted
values, each value depending on the mindset of a prospective
buyer. The same applies to decorating value.
A large majority—my guesstimate is over 95 percent—of
the antiques and collectibles trade members have a minimal
understanding of the decorative value within objects. They do
not track the decorative and fashion markets. If asked what
Looks, colors or pattern designs are in, out, or quiet, members
of the trade have a blank look on their face. Few in the trade
can identify and talk intelligently about the design styles of
Barbara Barry, Nate Berkus, Alessandra Branca, Jon Call,
Kathryn Ireland, Bunny Williams and Vern Yip. A few will
be familiar with the “television media” designers. Yip fits the
latter category.
[Author’s Aside #1: I did some Internet research to create
the above list. I recognized some but not all of the names. This
is an area that I need to visit more frequently.]
Martha Stewart is a recognizable name, but she is not an
interior designer in the true sense of the concept. Is there
a “Martha Stewart” Look? The answer is no. In order to
keep readers and viewers, Martha has to change her Look
constantly. As such, the Martha Stewart Look is a commercial
Look that is immediate rather than timeless.
When teaching “Business Practices: Secrets to Success,”
the main merchandising course, for my Institute for the Study
of Antiques and Collectibles, I recommended to participants
that they visit their public library or a Barnes and Noble
bookstore and skim through the magazines and newspapers in
the interior decorating, life-style, and Country, Victorian and
other “Look” sections. The participants were not to read the
magazines and newspapers, only look at the pictures. They
were to ask three questions: 1) What am I seeing that I saw
during my last visit; 2) What is not there that I saw previously;
and 3) What is new? The goal was to understand hot, stable
and declining Looks.
Once the participants gained experience answering the
above three questions, I introduced two more considerations
into their thought process. First, pick out those Looks featuring
antiques and collectibles, paying particular attention to how
by Harry L. Rinker
the antiques and collectibles were incorporated into the Look.
Second, identify what antiques and collectibles could support,
complement, and enhance the Looks.
The Institute participants were not to let others make
decisions for them but to do so on their own. The participants
would better be able to tout the objects offered for sale if
they believed in the storyline used to hook the customer.
Participants also were encouraged to give prominence in their
merchandising displays to these objects.
The Look is the key. Through much of the 20th century,
one “hot” Look tended to dominate interior design for
periods ranging from 10 to 20 years. During the American
Bicentennial, Country was tops with Early American a close
second. America experienced a Victorian craze in the late
1980s and early 1990s. Shabby Chic has made an appearance.
Some truths prevail. First, the Country Look is always in,
especially in the Midwest and Plains states. It is not always
dominant. The Country Look pendulum swings between
formal and primitive. Second, once a Look is established, it
may lose favor but never really goes away permanently. Early
American, Colonial Revival, Victorian, and Contemporary,
are examples. Third, there are Looks, such as Art Nouveau
and Art Deco.
[Author’s Aside #2: There are regional and cosmopolitan
Looks. The Mexican/Desert Look is popular in America’s
Southwest. Country in my home is represented by the
Pennsylvania German Look. French styles are popular in
large cosmopolitan cities. I chose “cosmopolitan” instead
of “urban” because there are some large cities where French
styles are blasé.]
The mid-1990s was a watershed in terms of interior
decorating. By the beginning of the 21st century, every Look
was in. “Eclectic,” also known as mix and match, became the
new American Look. The Look was whatever anyone wanted
it to be. Look became personalized. Individuals picked a
Look they liked and found one or more periodicals, interior
decorators or cable television shows to support and/or justify
it.
Cable television plays a major role in making the average
American decorator conscious. The approach is that creating
a Look is quick, easy and cheap. Forget permanence. Focus on
the immediate. When the chosen Look is out, decorate with a
new Look. The concept of living with something for a lifetime
has disappeared. The throw away generations added Look to
their discard list.
In 2013, my advice to appraisers, auctioneers, collectors,
dealers and others in the trade is go to the library, Barnes
and Noble, and the Big Box stores, skim the interior design,
life-style, and Look-focused magazines and newspapers and
make a list of as many Looks, even if associated with one
specific designer, as you can. Identify five to 10 key elements
of that Look. Once done, start identifying objects that support,
promote and enhance the Looks.
In this digital age, is it possible to quickly identify Looks
with the same ease and accuracy as visiting the library,
bookstore, or Big Box stores with large magazine sections?
In late 2013, the answer is no. I have tried repeatedly to
create effective search titles. General searches, difficult and
somewhat unreliable at best, proved negative. Specific search
titles produced marginal results.
Continued on page 17...
March-April 14
Oracle • Globe • Miami Gather, continued from page 5...
and collectibles.
Collectors who approach Gather when they are ready to
downsize have been inspirational with their amazing collections,
passion and expertise. Help along the way has come from the
vendors’ creativity and business experience plus support from
their Facebook family getting the word out, local media running
feature stories, and bloggers like local photographer Hilary
Lamb publishing fantastic
features and photo essays.
The Gers love what
they do, all of the treasures
they find, and the fun and
joy they bring to people
who come to the market.
They enjoy watching
customers’
reactions
each month and hearing,
“Wow! I didn’t think it
could be more beautiful
than last month and yet it
is!” Their goal is to keep
wowing customers and
encouraging imaginations.
For more information,
visit Gather A Vintage
Market on Facebook, go to: www.gathervintagemarket.com/,
call 520-310-7531 or email: [email protected].
24 Years in the Antique Business
unique or unusual antique
For that
Hilary Lamb, Photographer
Photographer Hilary Lamb told us, “I am a natural light
photographer residing in Sahuarita, Arizona, with the loves of
my life: my husband, son and our two dogs. As a transplant
from the lush green landscape of the East Coast, I’ve adjusted
to living in the desert by learning to notice and appreciate the
subtle beauty of a seemingly stark landscape. This ability to find
beauty in the most simple and seemingly commonplace things
has filtered to all areas of my life and has become the goal of my
photography. I have also discovered a love of both the history
and aesthetic charm of all things vintage.
“These two perspectives serve as the inspiration behind
bringing together the contrast of the ornate details and texture of
the expert craftsmanship displayed in the items with the delicate
pastels and light of the native foliage.”
You can follow Hilary at http://hilarylambphoto.blogspot.
com and also on facebook, instagram and pinterest. She can be
reached at [email protected].
150 W. Mesquite, Globe • 928-425-2220
Sales Storewide!
Open Mon-Sat 10-5 • Sunday by chance
2600 square feet of Wonderful Shopping
11
12
Globe-Miami March-April 14
March-April 14
Fountain Hills 13
14
Carefree • Cave Creek March-April 14
8th Annual Pewter & Wood
Silent Auction
To Benefit Alzheimer’s
Research, March 22
by Nancy Williams
The 8th annual Silent Auction benefitting the Alzheimer’s
Association will be held at Pewter & Wood Antiques in Cave
Creek on Saturday, March 22, from 1 to 2 p.m. An Open House
and Sale will take place the same day from 12:45 to 5 p.m.
Refreshments will be served.
The silent auction is open to the public and photos of auction
items will be available via email and they can be viewed in person
at the shop that day beginning at 12:45 p.m. Call-in bids for
auction items will be welcome during the auction. All proceeds
go directly to the Alzheimer’s Association - Desert Southwest
Chapter for research. Payment from successful bidders must be by
check payable to the Association.
Selections from Pewter & Wood’s inventory and Owner
Barbara Boardman Johnson’s own collection plus items from
private collectors will be in the auction. Barbara is still accepting
donated antiques—preferably from the 19th to early 20th
Century—and reproductions. Donors will be given receipts for tax
purposes. Donated items need to be in by March 10 or sooner, if
possible, and Barbara will provide pick up if needed.
This year’s items waiting to be auction off, so far, include:
a 19th Century dapple-gray rocking horse on a swing frame; a
19th Century wooden bank-teller’s gate; a 19th Century iron
and wooden dictionary stand; a 1930s hooked rug, mounted;
needlework; flow blue and many more wonderful items.
This is a cause that is near and dear to Barbara because her
Continued on next page...
NOW IN CIRCULATION AT
ALL ADVERTISING SHOPS
Read The Country Register on-line at
www.countryregister.com/AZ
ANNUAL Sewing, Quilting, Yarn & Needlework
Now in our 26th year
of publishing
The Country Register!
Call to speak with a
representative today to
make sure your shop or
event gets included in our
Great Recipes, Food
& Tea Rooms Issue!
Deadline for April-May Issue
is March 1st
602-942-8950 or 888-942-8950
March-April 14
Cave Creek Pewter & Wood, continued from previous page...
mother was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease in 1995 and
passed away in December 2011. Barbara began holding the silent
auctions as a way to raise funds to help fight this disease. Last
year’s auction raised $3500.00!
Contact Barbara for information on the auction or for directions
to the shop at 480-948-2060 or 602-677-5686 or by email: barbara.
[email protected]. For more information about Alzheimer’s,
contact the Alzheimer’s Association - Desert Southwest Chapter,
1036 E. McDowell Rd., Phoenix, 602-528-0545, or visit: www.
alz.org/dsw.
Pewter & Wood Antiques specializes in 18th and 19th C.
American Antiques with emphasis on original first surface paint.
Among loved items are: country furniture, painted smalls, folk
art, textiles, hooked rugs, braided rugs, samplers, stoneware, toys,
game boards, signs, pewter and decorative accessories. Barbara
looks for unusual pieces, especially those with original untouched
paint.
Collecting became a passion for Barbara at an early age, and
even today, she is fascinated by the histories of the items she
buys and sells. She is also impressed by the quality of things that
were made so long ago—yet still function as they were intended.
She likes it when she sees today’s young people becoming more
interested in older furnishings and artifacts.
In addition to her Cave Creek shop, which is open November
through April, Barbara has a second location in Enfield, New
Hampshire, that is open June to October. Monthly open houses are
held for customers; otherwise the shops are open by calling ahead
for an appointment. Barbara also exhibits in a number of shows
in the east.
For more information on Pewter & Wood, visit:
pewterandwoodantiques.com/.
15
Pewter & Wood
Antiques
ALZHEIMER’S BENEFIT
March 22, 2014
Silent Auction 1-2pm / Open House 1-4pm
April 25 & 26 • OPEN HOUSE • 10-5pm
40417 N 64th Place • Cave Creek
(480) 948-2060
Hours by Appointment
Our new website is up!
Go to www.theantiqueregister.com
to see the entire paper, read the articles and find all
the advertising shops on our interactive map!
16
Scottsdale March-April 14
March-April 14
Scottsdale Rinker, continued from page 10...
In a trip to a Barnes and Noble, I made a list of magazine
titles. All had websites. I checked out several. Navigation
varied from site to site. The difficulty was accessing the
pictures without having to call up each article. After several
frustrating experiences, I gave up and made returning to the
printed versions of my favorite magazines and newspapers my
primary research method.
It was not my intent to write a two-part series on this
subject. However, a second column is necessary so that I can
discuss the importance of color and pattern, identifying the
mindset of the buyers, recognizing flash in the pan Looks, and
suggesting a dealer mindset necessary to merchandize Looks.
Rinker Enterprises and Harry L. Rinker are on the
Internet. Check out www.harryrinker.com.You can listen
and participate in Whatcha Got?, Harry’s antiques and
collectibles radio call-in show, on Sunday mornings between
8 and 10 a.m. Eastern Time. If you cannot find it on a station
in your area, Whatcha Got? streams live and is archived on
the Internet at www.gcnlive.com. Sell, Keep Or Toss? How To
Downsize A Home, Settle An Estate, And Appraise Personal
Property (House of Collectibles, an imprint of the Random
House Information Group, $17.99) is available at your
favorite bookstore and via www.harryrinker.com. Copyright
© Harry L. Rinker, LLC 2014
17
18
Phoenix March-April 14
OZZIE’S
F U R N I S H I N G S
St. Vincent de Paul
A unique boutique-style shopping experience.
Fashionable Philanthropy
3927 E. Indian School Rd. Phoenix, AZ 85018
602.955.1460 • Fax 602.955.1492
March-April 14
Phoenix 19
20
Phoenix March-April 14
March-April 14
Phoenix • Mesa • Scottsdale Book Review
4th Edition of Elegant Glass
Has 1,000 Color Illustrations
by Robert Reed
The newly released 4th edition of Elegant Glass: Early,
Depression, and Beyond by Debbie and Randy Coe offers more
than 100 ornate patterns
through 1,000 beautiful
illustrations.
This
sweeping
book presents all the
favorites of the world of
elegant glass including
Cambridge,
Fenton,
Heisey,
Imperial,
Morgantown,
New
Martinsville and Paden
City. All are generously
featured along with their
own individual styles. All
the fine detail is extensive
including
production
dates, pattern numbers
or etching numbers,
the original colors of
production and current “mint condition” values.
In welcoming readers to the latest edition of Elegant Glass,
authors Debbie and Randy Coe note, “America’s finest glass
Continued on next page 27...
21
Mom & Pop Shop since 1967
Antique Outpost
New Time’s Best of 2006
Buy • Sell • Jewelry • Glass • Bottles • China • Pictures
Western Decoratives • 200,000 Postcards call ahead with wants
10012 N. Cave Creek Rd. Phoenix, AZ • 602-943-9594
1 Mile N. of Dunlap - Sunnyslope Area • Tues-Sat 10-5
Quality consignments,
retro & vintage furnishings,
antiques, estate treasures,
wall art, collectibles,
home decor & more!
Hours: Wed-Sun 12-5
Tues by Chance • Closed Mon
(602) 424-0488
4302 N 7th Avenue, Phoenix
22
Phoenix March-April 14
March-April 14
Phoenix 23
figs
Just
Arrived!
HOME & GARDEN
Antiques, Furniture, Decor,
Architectural Salvage
from Around the World
and Great Gifts
Best of New Times and
Best of Phoenix Magazine
4501 N. 7th Avenue
In the Melrose District
Phoenix, AZ
602-279-1443
1
0
0
‘S
O
F
G
A
R
D
E
N
S
T
A
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U
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24
Special Events March-April 14
Roadshow Style Antique Appraisal Fair
Held By Sun Antique Dealer Assoc. in May
Have you been wondering what your family Heirlooms or
Garage Sale Finds might be worth?
The Valley of the Sun Antique Dealer Association is hosting
its 4th annual Roadshow Style Antiques Appraisal Fair at the
Antique Plaza Antique Mall in downtown Mesa on Sunday,
March 30, from 12 p.m. to 3 p.m.
Knowledgeable dealers will be on hand to examine and give
valuations of your items and find what might be local treasures.
The cost is $10.00 per item or $25.00 for 3 items. (Bring and
present the ad in this issue for a 10% discount.)
Antique Plaza Antique Mall is located at 120 West Main
Street in Downtown Mesa.
March-April 14
Special Events 25
26
Phoenix • Tempe March-April 14
Mesa March-April 14
27
Elegant Glass, continued from page 21...
making companies were covered in this book. We wanted to
offer a full span of patterns for all of you collectors.”
They point out that the oldest pattern listed by the book in
America is one produced by Fostoria in 1915. The newest pattern
listed in the book is the Hobnail in Cranberry Opalescent, which
was still being made in the late 1990s.
Patterns are arranged alphabetically from American and
American Lady to Wildflower and Willowmere. In addition
to full lines of dinnerware, the coverage most often includes
bedroom, bath and further decorating pieces. The book also
includes sections on collector organizations, replacing items,
glass museums and a glossary.
Debbie and Randy Coe have been involved in collecting and
glassware dealing since the 1980s and have written a number
of glass-related books for collectors including Glass Animals
& Figurines.
Elegant Glass: Early, Depression, and Beyond, 4th edition,
hardcover, 256 pages, is $34.99 plus shipping from Schiffer
Publishing, www.schifferbooks.com.
Robert Reed, author and writer, has directed Antique and
Collectible News Service for the past 25 years providing 1,500
articles and numerous books. Reed’s 18th book, Lincoln’s
Funeral Train: The Epic Journey of Mourning Over 1,700
Miles of America’s Heartland, is due out in early 2014. Robert
Reed, Antique and Collectible News Service, PO Box 204,
Knightstown, IN 46148.
Beyond Expression
Antiques
Formal American Victorian
Furniture of the Finest Quality
Dining Tables and Chairs • Bookcases
Parlor Furniture - Settees & Chairs
Beds & Dressers • Fine Porcelain, Glassware, Art
Glass and Silver
Lovely Selection of Art Glass, including
Daum Nancy, Steuben, Tifffany, Mont Joye,
Moser and much more.
“Voted Best Antique Shop in the Southeast Valley
by the Arizona Republic”
3817 East McKellips Road, Mesa, Arizona 85215 • (480) 854-7755
Winter Hours: Wednesday-Saturday 10am-3pm or by appointment
Ron & Roberta Hopkins, Proprietors
Always Buying Quality Merchandise
28
Mesa March-April 14
March-April 14
Chandler • Mesa • Tucson Go to our NEW website
www.theantiqueregister.com
to find all our advertising
shops on our interactive map!
29
30
Mesa March-April 14
March-April 14
Mesa 31
32
Apache Junction March-April 14
Apache Junction’s Oldest & Largest Antique Mall
Over 80 Dealers
12,000 Sq ft of
Quality Antiques & Collectibles
Specializing in Advertising, Western, Coins, Jewelry,
Pottery, Glassware, Furniture, Toys,
And a Whole Lot More!
Open Daily 10:00-5:30
480-671-3566
300 W. Apache Trail, Ste 101
Apache Junction, AZ 85120
www.patternsofthepast.net
Always
Buying!
March-April 14
Apache Junction 33
34
Book Review
Gilbert March-April 14
Chinese and Japanese Porcelain Illustrated In Rich, New Volume
Collecting Chinese and Japanese Porcelain in PreRevolutionary Paris by Stéphane Castelluccio
offers a remarkable view and history of some wonderful pieces
of porcelain. The book is richly illustrated with 145
color photographs and 16 black and white images.
More importantly, the fascinating text follows the
changing taste in Paris from the early years of Louis
XIV through the 18th century.
Much of the extensive research is based on
a treasure trove of materials kept during that
exceptional era. Many of the historic inventories,
sales catalogues and treatises have never before
been published.
The changing tastes of that period mean that
blue-and-white Chinese works arranged in crowded
groups gradually lost favor. Such groups were
sometimes replaced by more orderly and balanced
groupings of Japanese pieces on brackets, tables and mantel pieces.
The ‘new’ wave of polychrome and monochrome porcelains
might on occasion receive elaborate silver or gilt-bronze mounts.
The book’s wonderfully illustrated pieces, including pitchers,
lidded bowls, vases and writing sets, are from the collections of
the J. Paul Getty Museum, the Victoria and Albert Museum and
the Musee Guimet in Paris. Like some of the absorbing research
by Robert Reed
materials, many of the illustrated pieces are also being published
for the first time.
“Since the 15th century, Chinese porcelain has fascinated
Europe for its scarcity, the beauty of its material,
the mystery surrounding its production, and the
exoticism of its shapes and decorations,” notes the
book’s introduction.
The book is the work of French author and
porcelain scholar Stéphane Castelluccio. He is
associated with Le Centre National de la Rechech
Scientifique (CNRS) in Paris and the author of two
other books of note.
Collecting Chinese and Japanese Porcelain in
Pre-Revolutionary Paris by Stéphane Castelluccio,
hardcover, 224 pages, color illustrations, is $60 plus
shipping from Getty Publications www.getty.edu/
publications or leading book stores.
Robert Reed, author and writer, has directed Antique and
Collectible News Service for the past 25 years providing 1,500
articles and numerous books. Reed’s 18th book, Lincoln’s
Funeral Train: The Epic Journey of Mourning Over 1,700 Miles
of America’s Heartland, is due out in early 2014. Robert Reed,
Antique and Collectible News Service, PO Box 204, Knightstown,
IN 46148)
C&J’s Antiques & Garden
March-April 14
Mesa 35
36
Historic Downtown Glendale & Catlin Court March-April 14
March-April 14
Historic Downtown Glendale & Catlin Court 37
38
Glendale • Sun City • Peoria • Sun City West March-April 14
March-April 14
Services 39
40
Cottonwood March-April 14
Decorating with Plates
by Mary Dessoie
Have you looked at decorating magazines lately? The top
interior designers are hanging plates everywhere! Decorating
with plates is an inexpensive way to make a bold statement.
Exquisite china that is beautifully arranged says much about
the homeowner. Why not make vintage and antique china an
integral part of your home décor?
Here are fifteen savvy styling tips to get you started:
1. Hang plates horizontally along the top of a wall as an
interesting border.
2. Butter pats as a border make an exciting visual statement,
particularly in the dining room and kitchen areas. Many
collectors enjoy displaying butter pats along the kitchen soffit.
3. Recently, I received word about a butter collector who
used vintage restaurant ware butter pats to outline the soaring
palladium windows in her kitchen.
4. Hang large 19th century Staffordshire platters next to a
breakfast table.
5. Don’t despair over chips, crazing or glaze flaws—they
will add to the shabby chic appeal of this easy-on-the-budget
decorating scheme.
6. Plain white ironstone plates in a grouping make a chic
statement against exotic wallpapers or lively paint colors.
7. Try matching same theme plates and platters, such as roses
or fruit-motif.
8. An arrangement of vintage plates representing various
states or tourist destinations is a real conversation piece and a
reminder of great vacations.
9. Plates combined with Impressionist artwork create a
Continued on next page 43...
March-April 14
McGuireville • Camp Verde Jim’s Trading Post in McGuireville
Celebrating Grand Opening on 3/1
Jim’s Trading Post—McGuireville’s newest shop—is
celebrating its Grand Opening on Saturday, March 1, from 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. There will be live entertainment from Richard
Mancini, and Cowboy Poet/Camp Verde Historian Bill Cowen
from 2 to 4 p.m. Head over to 2115 E. Beaver Creek Road,
McGuireville (Exit #293 off I-17), for refreshments and check
out the antiques, collectibles and more.
For more information, visit Jim’s Trading Post on Facebook,
email [email protected] or call 928-554-5526.
41
42
Dealing With The Dealers March-April 14
Dealing With The Dealers
TUCSON
Jewelry, Furniture,
Sterling, Antique Dolls & Toys
Quilts, Linens, Hummels
Dinner Sets, Art Deco,
Doll house furniture,
Depression Glass, Fenton,
Llardos, Books, Advertising,
Movie props, Coke, Lamps
& Man Stuff
Christine’s & Elegant Junque Shop
4932 & 4940 E. Speedway • Tucson, AZ
520-881-8181 • 520-323-0018
Browsers Welcome • Mon-Sat 10-5:30
Mariamne Designs
BUYING!
OLD Bottles
Postcards, Old Documents &
Photographs
Now Showing at
Antique Trove
2020 N. Scottsdale Rd
Dealer 231
Contact:
Sam Michael 480-962-6523
[email protected]
Visit my Sales Booth at
Antique Trove
(Dealer #140)
Scottsdale Rd & McDowell
Scottsdale AZ 85257
A Deal For Dealers
Now dealers can promote their booths or the shows they participate
in for $20.00 per month ($40 for each bi-monthly publication of The
Antique Register) Don’t depend on general shop ads to direct shoppers
to your wares. You are in business for yourself. How else can you so
effectively and affordably reach 20,000 interested potential customers?
Call 602-942-8950
Next deadline is April 1, 2014
March-April 14
Dewey-Humboldt • Mayer Decorating with Plates, continued from page 40...
serene environment.
10. Hang your collection of pie plates.
11. Don’t throw out your breakages! Place those pieces in a
clear glass vase.
12. Display plates arranged in an arch over a buffet or
sideboard.
13. Hang a wooden plate-rail shelf in a dining room, kitchen
or hallway, and use it to display plates. Do change your exhibit
seasonally.
14. In earthquake areas, use museum wax to attach valuable
china pieces to shelves. Then make sure the shelving unit is
earthquake-strapped to the wall as well.
15. Hang a beautiful 19th century Limoges plate on your
office wall to remind you of the lovely home that you have to
return to each evening.
Antique and vintage plates can be found at very reasonable
prices, and these stunning pieces with a history are so much more
appealing than contemporary china. Wouldn’t you adore having
your home decorated with quality Limoges or Staffordshire china?
Mary Dessoie covers a variety of topics in the field of antiques
and collectibles. She founded the Butter Pat Patter Association for
beginner and advanced collectors of butter pats—miniature plates
that were introduced in the mid-1800s for individual servings of
butter. A subscription to The Patter newsletter is $22 and includes
a mint-condition Royal Doulton butter pat and ten issues. Sample
copies are available by sending $4.00 and a LSSAE (66 cents)
to Mary Dessoie, 7950 E. Keats Avenue, No. 178, Mesa, AZ
85209-5025. Those who would like to start their subscriptions
immediately and receive their pat by return mail can send their
$22 check or money order payable to Mary Dessoie.
43
Prescott 44
• Cross Creek Antiques
• Pennington’s Antiques & Décor
117 N. Cortez • 928-445-3748
Vintage, Antiques, Indoors & Out Collectibles.
Furniture • Folk Art • Toys • Coins • Records
Books • Primitives • Old Tools • Ceramics
Vintage Jewelry • Glass & Tableware
Always buying • Daily 10-5
• Avalon Antiques
140 N. Cortez • 928-778-0481
Unique & fun antiques and collectibles.
Great prices. Very eclectic. Worth the
walk across the street.
• Mid-Century-Madness
140 1/2 N. Cortez • 928-778-0481
Mid-Century Madness offers quality vintage
mid century furniture & other unique pieces
from that era.
March-April 14
• Antiques
Off The Square
145 N. Cortez • 928-778-1040
Quality antiques of all kinds. Furnitureadvertising-glass-primitives-older
collectibles-tools-specializing in antique
toys (cast iron, pressed steel etc.)
Always buying.
Open 7 days a week.
• Merchandise Mart
Antique Mall
205 N. Cortez • 928-776-1728
N. AZ’s largest antique mall, over 15,000 sq. ft.
Est. 1986. Antiques, collectibles, furniture, and
a whole lot more. Buy & Consign.
Daily 10-5. Sun 11-4.
www.prescottantiquestores.com.
1125 W Gurley St • 928-776-0035
Fine American and European objects
representing many styles. Glass, pottery,
porcelain, furniture, mirrors, bookends, lamps,
kitchen, Common to rare. Circa 1840-1970
Open Fri-Mon • Thurs by appt
Closed Tues & Wed
• Granite Creek Antiques &
Bayberry’s Antique Dolls
218 N. Granite St. • 928-445-8559
4,000 sq. ft. of fine antique furniture,
art, glass, pottery and lots more! Plus
Bayberry’s Antique Dolls has antique
bisque, composition, 1950’s dolls, bears, doll
clothing and accessories. Dealers Welcome!
Mon-Fri 11-5, Sat 10-5, Sun 11-4
www.bayberrysantiquedolls.com
March-April 14
Prescott Quality Antiques & Antique Dolls
Are in Prescott Couple’s System
by Nancy Williams
It’s said that it’s very hard to get the antique business out of
your system, once you are “hooked” and it looks like Dave and
Diane Vigne, owners of Granite Creek Antiques & Bayberry’s
Antique Dolls in Prescott, are
living proof that it’s true!
Dave was raised in the
antique business and opened his
first shop in 1974 on Los Feliz
Blvd. in Los Angeles. Then, 25
years ago, the couple opened
their first Prescott antiques shop
and auction house and operated it
until they decided to retire at the
end of 1999 and that shop closed.
However, about 4 years
ago, Diane decided to open a
small doll shop on Montezuma,
moving to a larger location on Cortez Street. Dave then became
involved again and the business grew into a full antique shop,
which expanded into their big newest location at 218 N. Granite
Street, Prescott. So much for retirement!
Granite Creek Antiques & Bayberry’s Antique Dolls is now
located two blocks from historical downtown Prescott in a 4,000
square foot warehouse. Shoppers will find a wide variety of quality
items—primarily pre-1910—including: antique furniture with a
good selection of larger pieces, architectural items, artwork, coin-op
vending machines, Coca
Cola machines, Western
items,
antique
and
vintage bicycles, a large
collection of Victrola
and Edison machines,
porcelain, and glassware.
The assortment of clocks
is extensive and varied
plus there is lots of
lighting—from hanging lamps to table lamps. Offerings change
weekly as new items arrive.
Dave visits many auctions and also buys antiques from
individuals. He is selective with his choices and brings in pieces
that may only need minor restoration, which he is able to do himself
in his workshop on the premises.
For more information about the shop, visit Granite Creek
Antiques & Bayberry’s Antique Dolls on Facebook, go to www.
granitecreekantiques.com or www.bayberrysantiquedolls.com,
email [email protected] or call 928-445-8559.
Annual Doll Show & Sale in Prescott
Doll fanciers will be delighted with the wonderful antique/
vintage dolls that Diane specializes in. They won’t want to miss
the upcoming Lynne & Di’s Fourth Annual Doll Show &
Sale on Saturday, May 31, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., at La Quinta Inn,
4499 East State Rte 69 in Prescott. This special event will have
everything doll-related including: antique, composition, hard
plastic and contemporary dolls as well as accessories. There will
be raffles and door prizes.
Visit www.prescottdollshow.com/ for more information and
a slide show of offerings. (And be sure to check the Doll Show
ad in this issue for a $1.00 off ticket offer.)
45
Pine • Payson 46
Enjoy a day of Antiquing in
Payson, Arizona . . .Explore
Granny’s Attic
Over 7,000 Sq. Ft. of Quality Antiques
Collectibles • Furniture • Jewelry • Home Decor & Garden Items
“Best of the Rim Country” 14 years
Check out our new website!
www.grannysatticantiques.com
Come visit our Outback for outdoor decor, funiture
and much, much more. Also looking for quality dealers.
Old Merchandise Arrives Daily!
For Sale
Business and Building
Contact for more information
800 E. Hwy. 260, Payson, AZ 85541
(928) 474-3962
Hours: Open 7 days, 10-5
[email protected]
March-April 14
Pine • Payson March-April 14
47
PAYSON AND PINE
Rim Country’s Coolest Antique “Find”
PINE
1.
9
8
7
5
Hardscrabble Rd.
6
10
Pin
e1
3M
iles
Forest Dr.
2.
4
Highway 260
Longhorn Rd
3
Frontier St.
2
1
W. Main St
PAYSON
3.
BEELINE HWY 87
4.
7.
9.
5.
8.
10.
6.
48
Yarnell March-April 14
Book Review
New Wine Antiques Book,
From Corkscrews to Postcard
by Robert Reed
The new book, Wine Antiques and Collectibles by authors
Donald Bull and Joseph Paradi, is collector-generous with
more than 2,100 color illustrations of wine-related items from
Art Deco wine corkers to 1893 World’s Fair trade cards from
California wine producers.
The
remarkable
range further extends
from elegantly carved
corkscrews for wine
bottles to richly colored
fans that once promoted
exotic French wines. It
is a massive all-round
reference volume.
Readers can travel
from wine cellars to fine
dining tables and from
wine vineyards to lavish
signs advertising wine
makers far and wide.
For those who treasure
paper antiques, the book
has a grand offering of
postcards, trade cards,
sheet music and an astonishing array of wine bottle labels.
“It was not our intention to include every wine antique and
collectible out there, but to give a thorough sampling of what is
available,” note its authors.
“The reader will recognize that the book leans toward
American wine-making history and items, but our critics should
realize that there are dozens of books written on the same
subject in England, France, Italy, Germany and elsewhere so we
just filled a gap,” they explain.
Sections include oenology (the art of wine making), drinking
wine (from corkscrews to carafes to pitchers) and bolstering
wine (from bottles and jugs to wine lists).
Both authors have experience in writing books for collectors.
Donald Bull is noted for The Ultimate Corkscrew Book and
Champagne Collectibles, among others. Joseph Paradi has
produced books on both French and Hungarian corkscrews.
Wine Antiques and Collectibles, hardcover, 336 pages with
2,159 color photos and index, is $79.99 plus shipping from
Schiffer Publishing, www.schifferbooks.com.
Robert Reed, author and writer, has directed Antique and
Collectible News Service for the past 25 years providing 1,500
articles and numerous books. Reed’s 18th book, Lincoln’s
Funeral Train: The Epic Journey of Mourning Over 1,700
Miles of America’s Heartland, is due out in early 2014. Robert
Reed, Antique and Collectible News Service, PO Box 204,
Knightstown, IN 46148)
March-April 14
Wickenburg 49
50
Kingman • Fort Mohave March-April 14
Those Were The Days!
Cashing in with Cash Registers
by Jay Mark
Obsolescence is what makes collecting antiques so enjoyable.
Most of what we collect are the things that are no longer made.
Until the mid-twentieth century, progress and change was
incremental—occurring gradually over many years. All that
changed after WW II when transformation transpired at an
ever increasing pace creating a dramatic impact on the world
of collecting. For those of us with some years behind us, the
change is profound.
At no time in history has so much become antiquated in
such a short interval. The Internet is full of lists of things that
have gone the way of the dinosaur. Over time, most will be the
collectibles of the future.
In just my lifetime, I have seen corded telephones go the way
of obsolescence. On that note, when is the last time you saw a
pay telephone?
The Antique Cottage
We buy and sell Antiques & Collectibles
Antiques &
Collectibles
WE ARE OPEN
SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
We do layaways, special holiday sales
and of course, “friendliness and caring
for our customers” is our motto...
4596 Hwy 95
Fort Mohave, Arizona 86426
928-763-5242
Hours: Mon - Sat 10 - 4:30 • Sunday 12 - 5
A rare 1911 Saturday Evening Post ad depicts virtually the entire
line of National Cash Registers— ranging from a $1 machine that cost
$20 to a $765 8-drawer electric motor behemoth with electric lights.
Courtesy Those Were The Days!
Typewriters are now mostly history. As are film cameras.
Kodak, the pioneer of consumer photography, no longer even
manufactures film. When is the last time you saw a flash bulb?
Tube televisions are long gone—as are VCR’s with their
VHS tapes. Cassette tapes, 8-tracks and computer floppy discs
have become archaic. Disc records have vanished—although
vinyl seems to be enjoying resurgence. Soon to go will be CDs
and DVDs.
The elimination of gas service stations has led to the
disappearance of printed road maps.
Slide rules, once the ubiquitous accessory of every engineer
have transitioned from requisite tool to antique.
Most recently the standard instrument of retailers and
shopkeepers for 135 years is close to obsolescence— replaced
by handheld digital devices. The cash register has all but given
way to paperless credit transactions captured by computers,
tablets and smart phones.
Few today recognize the name Ritty. Yet, brothers James
and John Ritty gave the world one of the most important
contributions to the handling of cash in stores. They introduced
“…an accurate and reliable machine, which will not only
indicate the amount of each payment as it is made, but will keep
a true record of the sum of all the payments, which can be read
at a glance without the trouble of adding them.”
“Ritty’s Incorruptible Cashier” earned its patent in 1879 as
Continued on next page...
March-April 14
Sedona • Williams Those Were The Days, continued from previous page...
a mechanical means of protecting businesses from employee
theft. In 1871, James Jacob Ritty started in the saloon business
in Dayton, Ohio. Theft in an all cash businesses was a constant
critical problem for Ritty as for other enterprises.
Following a European trip in 1878 where he was inspired
by a mechanism that counted the revolutions per minute of a
steamboat’s propeller, Ritty returned to Dayton with an idea for
applying the concept to a device that would count and record
cash transactions. After two failed attempts, the Ritty brothers
finally hit on a workable machine.
With patent in hand, the brothers began manufacturing
their cash register with good success. At the same time, they
continued working on improvements. An 1881 patent added
a cash drawer to their device. From the very beginning, an
important component of the cash register was a bell that alerted
management to a transaction when the cash drawer was opened.
Soon James was split over manufacturing cash registers or
running his Pony House saloon—a popular watering hole for the
likes of Buffalo Bill Cody and, later, celebrities like boxer Jack
Dempsey and bank robber John Dillinger. He ultimately decided
to keep the bar business and sell the cash register manufactory.
Jacob Eckert, a glassware and china salesman, purchased the
company—naming it the National Manufacturing Company. In
1884, Eckert sold the venture to John Henry Patterson, who was
still making his way in business. After the acquisition, Patterson
renamed the enterprise National Cash Register Company.
Like Isaac Singer, who didn’t invent the sewing machine
but improved on the Elias Howe patent, or George Eastman,
who didn’t invent photography but through his Kodak cameras,
brought photography to the masses, Patterson transformed
his company into the powerhouse of the industry—one of the
largest corporations in the U.S.
But, as with any popular concept, competition followed.
By the start of the 20th century, at least 84 companies were
manufacturing cash registers. That number exploded to more
than 350 by 1915.
The earliest cash register cases were made of fine furniture
hardwoods like walnut. 1888 was the year NCR began
transitioning to more durable and attention-getting brass and
bronze cases. The ornate Art Nouveau designs, some created by
New York’s Tiffany Jewelers, gave the registers an air of quality,
substantiality, reliability and authority.
By the time they were replaced by newer technologies, cash
registers had become some of industry’s most complex and
intricate mechanical machines. And, yet, even with hundreds of
gears, springs and levers, and years of constant use, they remain
some of the most reliable devices ever manufactured.
Displaced by handheld instruments or computers with cash
drawers, the value of cash registers, which are difficult to display,
has regrettably diminished from highs a decade or so ago.
HINT: Between paper labels often found on drawer bottoms
and serial number plates, National Cash Registers are easy to
date and identify. Websites like that operated by Dick and Joan’s
Antiques correspond serial numbers to production dates. (http://
www.brasscashregister.net/learn_more/articles/how_to_date_
your_national_or_ncr_cash_register/)
A GOOD BOOK: The Incorruptible Cashier, Volumes 1 &
2 (Vestal Press 1988,1990) by Richard Crandall and Sam Robins
remain the best compendium of cash register history.
Nearly an antique himself, Jay Mark is a 42-year antiques
business veteran who owns Those Were The Days! now an
online bookstore. He also teaches, lectures frequently and writes
regularly about antiques and history. Reach him at jaymark@
twtdbooks.com. ©2014
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52
Boulder City, NV March-April 14
10th Annual Antiques in the Park
To Be Held in Boulder City in May
What better setting for antique treasures surviving from
simpler times than under the shady canopy of an old park? Perhaps
that is why the show in beautiful green Boulder City has become
more
popular
every year and
is billed as “The
Largest Outdoor
Antique
Show
in
Southern
Nevada.”
A Boulder City
antiques
show
was the brainchild
of
a
newly
transplanted show
promoter
(and
long-time collector) Bill Smith in 2004. It proved a success
and the Boulder City Chamber of Commerce embraced it as
a permanent addition to the Boulder City’s Spring Jamboree
park themes. Adjacent parks offer something for everyone with
a classic car show and booths of handcrafts, music, food and
entertainment.
Initially sponsored by The Country Register of Southern
Nevada, the event received instant exposure through antique
by Glena Dunn
shops throughout the valley and quickly became known to
dealers and collectors as a “fun show” to both vend and shop.
The popularity
of the show raised
awareness
of
Boulder City in
the antiques trade
and soon the small
historic town went
from two antiques
stores to the dozen
or so it boasts
today. As the town
was promoted as an
antiquing destination, additional unique eateries opened to feed
the visitors and soon other quaint shops as well. So even if you
are unable to make it the first weekend in May (the 3rd and 4th
this year), remember that you can enjoy Old Town Boulder City
any time! It is located off the 93 just 8 miles past Hoover Dam,
heading to Las Vegas.
For more information, visit: www.springjamboree.com/.
Glena Dunn is publisher of The Country Register of Southern
Nevada and proprietress of Back in Thyme Antiques, specializing
in original restored pedal cars and old Native American jewelry.
Photos by Michael Friedman.
March-April 14
Las Vegas, NV • Boulder City, NV 53
54
Yuma March-April 14
Book Review
American Toile Richly Displays
Past’s Scenic Fabric, Wallpaper
by Robert Reed
Author Michele Palmer presents richly displayed scenic fabric
and wallpaper, traditionally known as American Toile, in the
newly published book of the same name. American Toile: Four
Centuries of Sensational Scenic Fabrics and Wallpaper provides
a charming array of past favorites. Among the fine textiles are
patriotic themes
and symbols, rural
and urban views,
historical eras, and
leisure activities
over the years.
The
book
used over 180
brightly colored
photographs
to
generously
illustrate American
toile as it in turn
illustrated various
stories of life in the United States of America.
What many could call the fabric of life, America Toile
embraces a range of personalities from cowboys and Indians
to farmers and soldiers. The book also presents images of the
colonial era, Civil War and even the Old West.
Its author notes that some of the earliest toile produced by
American mills in the 19th century was created for presidential
campaigns, often showing the candidate as a military hero. She
says, “Ironically, however, toile had pretty much gone out of
fashion and would remain so throughout the end of the (19th)
century.”
There were exceptions including the Centennial Celebration
of 1876, the Columbian Exposition of 1892 and the SpanishAmerican War of 1898.
The scenes of toile during the 20th century included the
air adventures of Charles Lindbergh, World’s Fairs, Grandma
Moses and even the memorable 1976 Bicentennial.
Included in this small, but comprehensive, volume, are
antique collectible, vintage and also reproduction toile patterns,
along with contemporary designs. Additionally, there is a helpful
valuation and identification guide.
Michele Palmer’s previous titles include Toile: The Storied
Fabrics of Europe and America, and Gingerbread Gems of
Willimantic, Connecticut.
American Toile: Four Centuries of Sensational Scenic
Fabrics and Wallpaper by Michele Palmer, hardcover, 182
color photos, 128 pages, is $34.99 plus shipping from Schiffer
Publishing, www.schifferbooks.com.
Robert Reed, author and writer, has directed Antique and
Collectible News Service for the past 25 years providing 1,500
articles and numerous books. Reed’s 18th book, Lincoln’s
Funeral Train: The Epic Journey of Mourning Over 1,700
Miles of America’s Heartland, is due out in early 2014. Robert
Reed, Antique and Collectible News Service, PO Box 204,
Knightstown, IN 46148)
March-April 14
Silverton, CO • So. California Knowledge Is Key to
Successful Collecting
by Mary Dessoie
Collecting and dealing in antiques can lead to a profitable
hobby and fascinating pastime. There are a vast number of
antiques to suit every taste level and area of interest. There
are several avenues to accurately determine whether an item
is a genuine antique or a reproduction. It is important that you
become an antiques’ detective and conduct your own research.
Whether you are interested in buying a particular antique or
have an item that you wish to sell, you will need to research the
item thoroughly. By researching, you will find the questions and
the answers that you need to know. Is this an authentic antique?
Is it readily available on today’s market? What is the condition?
Research will also help you to determine what price range
the item is worth. The worth will depend upon several factors,
including its provenance and authenticity, its condition and how
many are in circulation. Research is really the main key to your
success.
Visit antique shops and talk to the owners about the pieces
that interest you. Fill your home library with reference books
or check some out at your local library. If you are serious about
collecting or dealing in antiques, then you should keep current
by subscribing to antiques-related newspapers, magazines and
newsletters.
Joining a local or national collectors’ club will provide you
with the means to learn more about the antiques that are of
interest to you and help you to keep up to date with pricing
guidelines. There are clubs for just about every category of
collecting—from the Alarm Clock Collectors Club to the
Zeppelin Collectors Club. Most of the collectors’ clubs have
newsletters and allow members to place complimentary ads in
order to sell excess items or advertise their wish lists. However,
the greatest benefit of joining a club is having the entrée to meet
other collectors from around the country and make new friends.
Mary Dessoie covers a variety of topics in the field of
antiques and collectibles. She founded the Butter Pat Patter
Association for beginner and advanced collectors of butter
pats—miniature plates that were introduced in the mid-1800s
for individual servings of butter. A subscription to The Patter
newsletter is $22 and includes a mint-condition Royal Doulton
butter pat and ten issues. Sample copies are available by
sending $4.00 and a LSSAE (66 cents) to Mary Dessoie, 7950
E. Keats Avenue, No. 178, Mesa, AZ 85209-5025. Those who
would like to start their subscriptions immediately and receive
their pat by return mail can send their $22 check or money
order payable to Mary Dessoie.
55
56
Phoenix • Goodyear March-April 14